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When his father opened the gate, two police officers rushed in and carted Tekle off in handcuffs to a police station.

” officials asked during his interrogation, according to an affidavit Tekle filed with U. ” Officials at the Eritrean Embassy in Washington and at the Permanent Eritrean Mission to the United Nations did not respond to requests for comments about Tekle’s allegations of forced conscription and abuse by the Eritrean military.

A State Department human rights report this month said forced conscription is common in Eritrea.

He got names and numbers for smugglers in various countries and references about reliability and cost. But after a visit to the airport, Tekle’s Brazilian smuggler decided that it would be safer for Tekle to take a bus to Venezuela and to continue on to Colombia by bus. In Colombia, a smuggler named John offered to use the South African passport to get Tekle through Bogota’s airport immigration checks and then to Honduras. Tekle balked and turned to another smuggler, who asked for $450 to get him into Panama.

At the Colombian border, Tekle said, he and other migrants each bribed the border guards with $100. The journey took three days and included hikes and boat rides. After weeks in detention, he was deported to Colombia to a refugee camp. He traveled to San Andres, a Colombian island in the Caribbean Sea, hoping to make it from there to Nicaragua.

Tekle’s schoolmates cheered as guards escorted him away.

That evening, he was arrested and detained for three months.

The smuggler then mailed the passport to South Africa, where he obtained a fake Brazilian visa and got Tekle a legitimate visa for Gambia.

In July 2008, Tekle flew from Sudan to Gambia, stopping in Kenya and Senegal, and on to Brazil, arriving at the northeastern city of Fortaleza.

His family arranged for him to be smuggled into Sudan. Tekle said his parents, in Eritrea, asked a businessman they knew, who was traveling to Khartoum, the capital, to ferry money for more smugglers to get Tekle to Brazil — a steppingstone to the United States well known to Eritrean migrants.

But Tekle said he knew even then that this was only a first step. The smugglers, whom his parents hired for him, took Tekle through a long hike across open fields studded with sharp thorns. Even early on, Tekle’s journey showed how smugglers form complex networks to move people across borders.

But he still shudders over the trek, which brought him to the United States by way of Sudan, Kenya, Gambia and Cape Verde, then Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, Panama, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala and Mexico. probably do not pose a risk to national security, the problem is terrorists could exploit these smuggling travel networks,” said James C.